Deakin University
Browse

Chemical spying in coral reef fish larvae at recruitment

Download (597.51 kB)
Version 2 2024-06-18, 09:24
Version 1 2015-10-01, 00:00
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-18, 09:24 authored by Natacha Roux, Rohan M Brooker, Gaël Lecellier, Cécile Berthe, Bruno Frédérich, Bernard Banaigs, David Lecchini
When fish larvae recruit back to a reef, chemical cues are often used to find suitable habitat or to find juvenile or adult conspecifics. We tested if the chemical information used by larvae was intentionally produced by juvenile and adult conspecifics already on the reef (communication process) or whether the cues used result from normal biochemical processes with no active involvement by conspecifics ("spying" behavior by larvae). Conspecific chemical cues attracted the majority of larvae (four out of the seven species tested); although while some species were equally attracted to cues from adults and juveniles (Chromis viridis, Apogon novemfasciatus), two exhibited greater sensitivity to adult cues (Pomacentrus pavo, Dascyllus aruanus). Our results indicate also that spying cues are those most commonly used by settling fishes (C. viridis, P. pavo, A. novemfasciatus). Only one species (D. aruanus) preferred the odour of conspecifics that had had visual contact with larvae (communication).

History

Related Materials

Alternative title

Interception de l’information chimique lors du recrutement larvaire des poissons coralliens ?

Location

Amsterdam, The Netherlands

Open access

  • Yes

Language

eng

Publication classification

C Journal article, C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2015, Acade´mie des sciences.

Journal

Comptes Rendus Biologies

Volume

338

Pagination

701-707

eISSN

1768-3238

Issue

10

Publisher

Elsevier